TY - JOUR
T1 - Factor structures of the neurocognitive assessments and familial analysis in first-episode schizophrenia patients, their relatives and controls
AU - Wang, Qiang
AU - Vassos, Evangelos
AU - Deng, Wei
AU - Ma, Xiaohong
AU - Hu, Xun
AU - Murray, Robin M.
AU - Collier, David A.
AU - Li, Tao
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - Objectives: Schizophrenia patients have a wide range of cognitive deficits. To explore the structure of these deficits and index their psychometric properties in order to define the major separable factors, exploratory factor analysis (EFA) was performed on a series of neuropsychological test results in a sample of Han Chinese first-episode schizophrenia patients, their relatives and controls without mental illness.
Methods: The factors derived from the composite sample were tested with confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) in each of the subsamples. The heritability of each factor was estimated by using the mixed linear model in order to determine whether the common factor scores describe the familiarity of the data.
Results: A six-factor model of general mental activity, sort and shift, attention and anti-interference, logical memory, reasoning and problem-solving/executive function, and visual reproduction were extracted and confirmed on EFA and CFA. There was a hierarchy in cognitive performance deficits in relatives depending on their relatedness to probands. Patients performed more poorly than siblings/offspring in general mental activity, sort and shift, attention and anti-interference, logical memory, planning and problem-solving, but not in visual reproduction. The logical memory domain was found to be significantly heritable (h
AB - Objectives: Schizophrenia patients have a wide range of cognitive deficits. To explore the structure of these deficits and index their psychometric properties in order to define the major separable factors, exploratory factor analysis (EFA) was performed on a series of neuropsychological test results in a sample of Han Chinese first-episode schizophrenia patients, their relatives and controls without mental illness.
Methods: The factors derived from the composite sample were tested with confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) in each of the subsamples. The heritability of each factor was estimated by using the mixed linear model in order to determine whether the common factor scores describe the familiarity of the data.
Results: A six-factor model of general mental activity, sort and shift, attention and anti-interference, logical memory, reasoning and problem-solving/executive function, and visual reproduction were extracted and confirmed on EFA and CFA. There was a hierarchy in cognitive performance deficits in relatives depending on their relatedness to probands. Patients performed more poorly than siblings/offspring in general mental activity, sort and shift, attention and anti-interference, logical memory, planning and problem-solving, but not in visual reproduction. The logical memory domain was found to be significantly heritable (h
M3 - Article
SN - 1440-1614
VL - 44
SP - 109
EP - 119
JO - Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry
JF - Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry
IS - 2
ER -